Tyler Bertuzzi's Hat Trick Lifts Blackhawks To First Win Of Road Trip

Through the first two periods of the hockey game, the Chicago Blackhawks were lucky to be in a scoreless tie with the Vancouver Canucks.

Being outshot 35-19 through two is not a recipe for success, but Spencer Knight kept them in the game. At that point, the Blackhawks needed to change the narrative. Otherwise, they would have had no chance of winning. 

Tyler Bertuzzi's Hat Trick

Tyler Bertuzzi kicked off the scoring by deflecting a Matt Grzelcyk shot off his body and into the net. He is one of the best in the league at sneaking to the back door of the net-mouth and scoring. He didn't even need his stick to score this puck, but they all count the same on the scoreboard. 

Remarkably, Bertuzzi scored another goal just over three minutes later. This one was almost a carbon copy of the first goal. This time, he used his stick to redirect it into the net. 

After Ilya Mikheyev scored his fourth of the season to make it 3-0, Bertuzzi completed the hat trick by collecting a loose puck in front of the net and putting it away. This was the fourth career hat trick for Bertuzzi, and his first in a Blackhawks sweater. 

Connor Bedard's Best Game In His Hometown

A lot has been made about Connor Bedard visiting Vancouver, his hometown, every time he goes there. His previous visits, however, have not gone well for him or the team. This time, he came out and played his best game he's ever had against the Canucks. 

For one, he collected an assist on Bertuzzi's second goal. He made a great cross-ice shot pass, which caught Bertuzzi's stick and went into the net. This assist is Bedard's first career point against Vancouver. That sealed a six-game point streak for Bedard, who is on pace to shatter all of his career highs. 

Bedard also sealed the victory with an empty-netter. This is his first goal against the team he grew up cheering for. It isn't just any empty netter, though. Spencer Knight made a great pass to the neutral zone, and Bedard collected it by chipping it and spinning past a former Norris Trophy winner in Quinn Hughes. He then tucked it into the open cage. That 5-2 score would hold as the final. 

Spencer Knight

Vancouver rallied to find two goals in the third period, but that doesn't take away from Spencer Knight's overall dominant performance. He ended up making 43 saves on 45 shots, which is a save percentage of .956. 

Knight also had the aforementioned primary assist on Bedard's empty netter. His ability to play pucks behind the net and advance them is an important weapon for the Blackhawks. 

Without the brilliance of Knight, especially during an extremely subpar second period by the team as a whole, they would not have won the game. 

Watch Every Blackhawks Goal

Chicago Blackhawks (@NHLBlackhawks) on XChicago Blackhawks (@NHLBlackhawks) on XHawks on the board✅Chicago Blackhawks (@NHLBlackhawks) on XChicago Blackhawks (@NHLBlackhawks) on XTyler Bertuzzi goal no. ✌️Charlie Roumeliotis (@CRoumeliotis) on XCharlie Roumeliotis (@CRoumeliotis) on XIlya Mikheyev scores against his former team for his 4th goal of the season. That's 3 third-period goals in a span of 4:33 for Chicago. #BlackhawksChicago Blackhawks (@NHLBlackhawks) on XChicago Blackhawks (@NHLBlackhawks) on XAND THAT’S A TYLER BERTUZZI HAT TRICK🧢🧢🧢B/R Open Ice (@BR_OpenIce) on XB/R Open Ice (@BR_OpenIce) on XBedsy with the spin, the pickup, and his first goal in his home area of Vancouver 🔥

Next Up For Chicago

Vancouver was the fourth of six stops on the current road trip. Chicago is now 1-2-1 with three out of eight points collected.

Next up for the Chicago Blackhawks is a Friday night matchup against the Calgary Flames. The Flames are 4-9-2 and struggling, but that does not mean that it will be a free pass for Chicago. Calgary is loaded with talent and can use it to win games at any time. 

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Mitchell Robinson shows importance to Knicks with game-wrecking performance vs. Timberwolves

Mike Brown was shocked when he looked at the final box score on Wednesday night

He looked at the blocks category and thought someone must have made a mistake. 

“I was shocked (Mitchell Robinson) only had three,” Brown said with a laugh. “Mitch was all over the place, guarding everybody, blocking shots, contesting shots.”

There aren’t many players in the world who can do what Robinson did on Wednesday. He had nine offensive rebounds and three blocks in just 16 minutes. The Knicks in the second half outscored Minnesota by 17 in Robinson’s nine minutes. 

He wrecked the game for Minnesota. And the box score doesn’t entirely encapsulate it. The Knicks had 21 offensive rebounds as a team. Many of those were thanks to the attention the Timberwolves had to pay to Robinson. 

“Whenever he’s out there doing that, it makes us really comfortable shooting shots because we might get a second chance,” Jalen Brunson said. 

The issue, of course, is how often Robinson is "out there" for New York. 

He has been hidden for most of this early season. He’s missed three preseason games and three regular season games as part of the Knicks’ workload management plan. 

His appearances have been sporadic. But nights like Wednesday remind you why the Knicks have held on to Robinson for so long. 

Nights like Wednesday remind you why VP of Sports Medicine Casey Smith and his group are managing Robinson’s workload. 

Given his significant injury history, the Knicks are willing to sit Robinson during the regular season with the bigger picture in mind. 
Because if the Knicks have a healthy Robinson in the postseason, they are a different team. It’s probably easy to forget how good Robinson can be because he’s been out of the lineup so often. But nights like Wednesday serve as a reminder: Robinson can dominate a game when healthy. 

NHL Insider 'Can See' Flyers, Trevor Zegras Contract Extension Talks Starting

Trevor Zegras is off to an absolutely scorching start to his tenure with the Philadelphia Flyers, leading top NHL insider Elliotte Friedman to believe contract extension talks could some soon.

Zegras, 24, has impressively ripped off four goals, 11 assists, and 15 points for the Flyers in just 13 games, accounting for nearly half of the team's 38 goals entirely on his own.

The former top Anaheim Ducks draft pick seems to have found the perfect fit for himself landing in Philadelphia with good friends Jamie Drysdale and Cam York, and that should give the Flyers all the more reason to keep him long-term.

After all, York, also 24 and a fellow draft classmate, just re-upped with the Flyers for five years this summer.

"Extension I’m starting to wonder about: Trevor Zegras, Philadelphia. Eligible now. Yes, it’s only been 13 games, but it looks like a good fit and I can see the Flyers gauging interest in lengthening the relationship," Friedman wrote in his latest "32 Thoughts" column.

Flyers' Trevor Zegras Gets Big Praise From Canadiens StarFlyers' Trevor Zegras Gets Big Praise From Canadiens StarTrevor Zegras' great start to the season has gotten the attention of Canadiens star Cole Caufield.

Friedman, with as many connections as he has and as many reports he's made, has an intimate of understanding of how pretty much every NHL team operates at this point in his stellar career as an insider in hockey.

From the Flyers' side of things, there aren't any apparent problems with a potential contract extension worth dwelling on.

They're loaded with cap space after offloading Joel Farabee and Ryan Ellis this year, while Egor Zamula, Nick Deslauriers, and Christian Dvorak are all on expiring contracts.

The Flyers have also had interest in acquiring Zegras for quite a while, so they obviously coveted the player and moved to get him from the Ducks for a reason.

Zegras, on the other hand, is due for a considerable raise performing at his current rate, which may or may not deter talks from the Flyers' side.

For example, if Philadelphia shells out a $10 million AAV contract in December and Zegras finishes the season with 50 or 60 points, then it might not work out so well.

That said, the 24-year-old is currently carrying a $5.75 million cap hit, so something in the $8- or $9 million range would do, especially as Sean Couturier and Travis Konecny are the only two Flyers players making more than $7 million as things currently stand.

I had already considered the Flyers could move quickly to try and get something done with their newfound star player, but now that Friedman is on it, too, there might be more to it.

On that note, it's pretty clear what the Flyers should do: extend Trevor Zegras. That's not up for debate, really.

Kadri Shines in 1000th Game as Flames Cruise Past Blue Jackets 5–1

The Calgary Flames celebrated in style on Wednesday night, earning back-to-back wins for the first time this season with a decisive 5–1 victory over the Columbus Blue Jackets at the Scotiabank Saddledome.

Nazem Kadri, suiting up for his milestone 1,000th NHL game, led the way with a goal and a spirited performance that ignited the Saddledome crowd. The Flames came out firing early, scoring twice in the opening minute and never looking back.

Morgan Frost opened the scoring just 56-seconds in, redirecting a shot past Columbus goaltender Jet Greaves. Moments later, Blake Coleman doubled the lead with his fifth of the season. The Blue Jackets responded later in the first with a shorthanded goal from Kirill Marchenko, who beat Dustin Wolf five-hole on a breakaway.

© Sergei Belski-Imagn Images

But the night belonged to Kadri and the Flames. Early in the second period, Kadri buried a top-shelf finish off a feed from Joel Farabee to restore Calgary’s two-goal cushion. Less than a minute later, Adam Klapka made it 4–1, holding onto the puck on an odd-man rush and ripping a shot glove-side. Mikael Backlund added an empty net goal to seal the deal. 

Wolf stopped every shot he needed to the rest of the way, making a career-high 42 saves, picking up his fourth win of the year to move to 4–7–1 on the season.

The Flames improve to 4–9–2, while Columbus falls to 7–6–0.

Three Takeaways

1. Kadri’s milestone moment

Nazem Kadri became the 407th player in NHL history to skate in 1,000 career games — and he made it count. The veteran centre not only scored a big goal but brought energy and poise all night. Kadri now leads the Flames in scoring with 11 points (4G, 7A) through 15 games.

2. Quick strikes define the night

The Flames’ offence found its rhythm through bursts of momentum. They scored twice within the first 92-seconds of the game and later added a pair of goals just 37-seconds apart in the second period. That kind of timing proved too much for Columbus to handle.

3. Kuznetsov earns first NHL point

Defenceman Yan Kuznetsov, recalled from the AHL Wranglers on Tuesday, made his season debut and recorded his first career NHL point with an assist on Klapka’s goal. Despite a few early jitters in his own zone, the 23-year-old settled in and showed flashes of composure as the game went on.

Heinen, Graves Look To Take Advantage Of Second-Chance Opportunity With Penguins

It has been a busy 24-plus hours for the Pittsburgh Penguins, who put three players on injured reserve, sent a player back to the AHL, and recalled three other players. 

And it comes as no surprise that the roster move getting all of the attention is the call-up of top goaltending prospect Sergei Murashov, who thoroughly impressed in training camp, just won AHL Goaltender of the Month honors, and has dominated at every level of professional hockey.

While the two other call-ups may not be young or nearly as exciting for some fans, they were call-ups well-earned - and they are two players at an important crossroads in their careers.

Veteran forward Danton Heinen and veteran defenseman Ryan Graves were those other two players recalled, and this represents a second-chance NHL opportunity for them with the Penguins. Both players were waived at the conclusion of NHL training camp and went unclaimed, and they were re-assigned to Wilkes-Barre/Scranton (WBS) in the aftermath.

To their credit, a lot of veteran players get discouraged and don't take those situations very well. In this case, both players handled it as best they could - and they took the opportunity and ran with it. 

The 30-year-old Heinen returned to the NHL Tuesday in a tie for the AHL lead in points with 14, and Graves - also 30 - led all defensemen on the team with a goal and seven points in 10 games on the season. Both players could have taken a wrong turn in the wake of their AHL assignment. 

But that's not what happened.

Penguins Call Up 3 Players & Announce Several Roster MovesPenguins Call Up 3 Players & Announce Several Roster MovesThe Pittsburgh Penguins have made a series of roster moves.

"At the end of the day, it’s the kind of person you are, too," Graves said. "You’re not going to go there and sulk and complain. You’re still playing hockey for a living. That’s pretty cool. There’s been some aspects of it that have been really hard. But I’ve been on the side of it where you’re a 20-year-old kid and coming into the American League, and there’s some guys that I’ve played with that came down and you could see both sides of how guys take it.

"You can either go there and ride into the sunset and just take it with a bad attitude and be miserable, or you can go there and you can try to play and work on your game and get better. It’s a good league, so just go there, put in work and try to come back.”

And, now, Graves is just trying to make the most of his second opportunity.

“Obviously, this is where you want to be. It’s a tough situation," Graves said. "Obviously, you want to play in the NHL. It’s the best league in the world. It’s hard to be here. I have an appreciation for that. You go there [to the AHL], you want to go with a good mindset and you want to be back here. So I’m just trying to make the most of the opportunity.”

Sergei Murashov’s First NHL Shot With The Penguins Is HereSergei Murashov’s First NHL Shot With The Penguins Is HereSergei Murashov is set to make his NHL debut with the Pittsburgh Penguins in the coming days.

Heinen gave a pretty similar response. 

"You always try to learn from mistakes, learn from things," Heinen said. "I don’t think you can look back with regrets. You’ve just got to keep looking forward.

“I just want to prove that I believe I’m an NHLer and I believe that I can help this team win. That’s what I’m coming up here to do and do everything I can to show it.”

Obviously, an AHL assignment for someone who has been playing in the NHL for a long time is never easy. But it helps that Wilkes-Barre/Scranton is off to a hot start in the AHL, and it fostered an environment for Heinen and Graves to thrive.

"The coaches put a good system in.," Heinen said. "They communicate well. It’s a great group of guys, good hockey players… It’s definitely well run.”

Penguins' Top Prospect Ben Kindel Gets Big OpportunityPenguins' Top Prospect Ben Kindel Gets Big OpportunityThere have been a ton of boxes checked for <a href="https://thehockeynews.com/nhl/pittsburgh-penguins">Pittsburgh Penguins</a>' rookie sensation Ben Kindel in the last two months.

And even if the ultimate goal is always to play at the NHL level, Graves was able to pull a lot from his experience with the AHL squad. 

“There’s a lot you can take from it," Graves said. "It’s how you approach it. You go down there. You get a lot of opportunity to play. You play in all situations. You play a lot of minutes, some of them [in situations] you might not play here. It’s nice to be able to build confidence and feel the game. And you can work, and you can make mistakes and you can keep playing because you’re going to play a lot. And you just try to build your game and build confidence.

"So, that’s the approach you have to take to it. I feel like I played well down there. So, again, I’m just trying to make the most of the opportunity here.”


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Penguins' Forward Appears Close To Return

More than likely, the Pittsburgh Penguins won't have to wait much longer for one of their forwards to return to the lineup. 

On Wednesday, forward Kevin Hayes - who has been on injured reserve with an upper-body injury since training camp - took line rushes and was a full participant in practice. He skated on the fourth line with Blake Lizotte and Connor Dewar. 

Hayes, 33, is in the final year of a seven-year contract, and the Penguins are responsible for $3.57 million of his $7.1 million total cap hit. In 64 games with the Penguins last season, the 6-foot-3, 217-pound center registered 13 goals and 23 points.

Just days ago, it appeared that the Penguins were going to have some very hard decisions to make regarding the roster in order to activate Hayes. However, things have changed very quickly. 

On Tuesday, Pittsburgh placed three players - forwards Justin Brazeau and Noel Acciari as well as goaltender Tristan Jarry - on injured reserve and re-assigned young defenseman Owen Pickering to Wilkes-Barre/Scranton (WBS) to get more AHL reps after a few shaky games at the NHL level.

In a few corresponding moves, the Penguins recalled forward Danton Heinen, defenseman Ryan Graves, and top goaltending prospect Sergei Murashov. However, because of the optioning of Pickering, the Penguins still have one open roster spot, as they're actively carrying 12 forwards, eight defensemen, and two goaltenders. This means they can activate Hayes without a corresponding roster move.

The Penguins play the Washington Capitals on Thursday, and Hayes appears poised for a potential return. Pittsburgh have yet to activate him from injured reserve. 

Penguins Call Up 3 Players & Announce Several Roster MovesPenguins Call Up 3 Players & Announce Several Roster MovesThe Pittsburgh Penguins have made a series of roster moves.

Other injury notes:

- The Penguins announced that Brazeau (upper-body) would be out at least four weeks, Acciari (upper-body) would be out at least three weeks, and Jarry (lower-body) would be out at least three weeks. No further details were given on their injuries or when they were sustained, although head coach Dan Muse said that Jarry was injured during Monday's 4-3 loss to the Toronto Maple Leafs.

- Forward Filip Hallander left Wednesday's practice early on and did not return to the ice. He was briefly rotating in on the fourth line before he departed. No update was given on his status.

- Forward prospect Rutger McGroarty continues to rehab in WBS and appears close to returning to the lineup at the AHL level. The 21-year-old McGroarty missed the entirety of training camp and the first month of the regular season with an undisclosed upper-body injury he sustained sometime during the summer. 

Penguins Provide Injury Updates On Three Key PlayersPenguins Provide Injury Updates On Three Key PlayersThe Pittsburgh Penguins provided some injury updates to three players on Wednesday.

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Observations From Blues' 6-1 Loss Vs. Capitals

Well, so much for building in the right direction.

The St. Louis Blues thought they had things figured out the past three games, ones in which they were 1-1-1 and conceivably could have won them all.

And then Wednesday happened.

Well …

They fell off a cliff. And it was a hard fall.

It was a complete fail in a 6-1 loss to the Washington Capitals at Capital One Arena in Washington, D.C. on Wednesday.

And on top of the Blues’ ineffective play in this game that dropped their record to 4-8-2 overall and 1-5-2 in their past eight games, Alex Ovechkin scored his 900th NHL goal becoming the first player in league history to reach the feat.

Alexey Toropchenko did score for the Blues, their first shorthanded goal of the season:

But it was an inept first two periods that proved costly.

Let’s look at the game observations:

* Montgomery wanted a physical lineup – Coming off a 3-2 win against the Edmonton Oilers, one might have figured the same lineup against the Capitals, but coach Jim Montgomery inserted Nathan Walker and Logan Mailloux in for Mathieu Joseph and Matthew Kessel to provide more nastiness and bite.

Well, someone forgot to check in at the door that requirements for success in this game was going to take winning wall battles, loose pucks and the like.

The Blues were torched in that department that led to a number of Capitals goals, including the first one, scored on the power play by Tom Wilson; not the actual goal itself, but the three-plus minute shift that lasted in their zone that ended with Colton Parayko, whose shift was 2:59, took a cross checking penalty (Dylan Holloway’s shoft lasted 3:01, Dalibor Dvorsky’s was 2:55):

Also the first of Anthony Beauvillier’s two goals that made it 3-0 at 4:33 of the second period was another case of a lost wall battle that led to his backhand goal into an empty cage.

And then there’s John Carlson’s goal that made it 4-0 at 9:28, a shot from the slot that turned into the Capitals winning another loose puck and being hungrier for pucks that ended Jordan Binnington’s night at four goals allowed on 15 shots, including no saves and three goals allowed in the second period.

And the greatest example of competing for wall battles was on Beauvillier’s second of the night at 16:20 that made it 5-0 when the Blues, this time, were in the offensive zone, puck was in the corner along the wall, lose that battle and the puck (again), the Capitals break out with it, make a hand pass that Mailloux either didn’t see or wasn’t aware of the rule that if he doesn’t touch the puck in that situation and Beauvillier does, the play is dead. But he dives, and it was a hustle attempt, touches the puck rendering it live and Beauvillier beats Joel Hofer from the left circle:

It was just a microcosm of everything that went wrong from opening puck drop to that moment. One team came ready to play with an attitude of wanting to compete, the other didn’t. It’s as simple as that. No compete whatsoever from this group on Wednesday.

* Despite being pulled, Binnington kept team in it in first period, slip-up started downward spiral – Binnington was busy in the first period, not diving from post to post, but with the Blues spending much of the period in their own end, he came up with some solid saves stopping 11 of 12 shots and keeping it a 1-0 deficit.

But on the Ovechkin goal, Binnington got his initial clear into the corner knocked down by the ‘Great 8’ and the puck doesn’t get cleared, it winds up back in the corner and Ovechkin blind backhands the puck from a sharp angle into the net at 2:39 of the second period to make it 2-0:

It marked the third time (first for Binnington) a Blues goalie has been pulled from a game this season through 14 games.

This game marks the seventh time(!) the Blues have allowed five or more goals in a game. That didn’t happen until Game 52 last season.

And on a night in which Binnington tied Mike Liut for most games played by a goalie (347) in franchise history, that's rubbing some salt in the wound. 

* The penalty kill is simply not good – Pius Suter was brought in this year to help the Blues' 28th-ranked penalty kill from last season.

I get one player isn't going to be the do-all, tell-all, but the penalty kill at the start of this season is pitiful again.

After Wilson scored nine seconds into Washington's power-play, oh by the way which was 0-for-13 coming into the game, it was the second straight penalty kill the Blues allowed a goal within the first 10 seconds (Edmonton scored eight seconds into theirs) and 11th time in 14 games the Blues' PK has allowed a goal, including the fifth straight game and eighth in nine.

And it was another case of a skater (Wilson) in front of a Blues goalie waiting for a deflection or tip with little or no resistance.  

The PK was 74.2 percent last year and is now a woeful 67.6 percent. What's amazing is that there's four teams with worse numbers than the Blues.

* Was changing the lineup wise? – I get what Montgomery was doing when he decided to insert Walker and Mailloux into the lineup, some more physicality on the fourth line and a bigger body on the blue line. But was it wise?

This group just came off a solid win with the lineup it had with Joseph and Kessel in it and deservedly winning for the first time in 16 days. I’m not a coach here, but sticking with that same group would allow these players to continue to build in the right direction.

It just looked like it was bad mojo from the outset breaking up a lineup that really worked well together on Monday, one that kept Connor McDavid, Leon Draisaitl and Ryan Nugent-Hopkins all without a shot on goal for the first time in a regular-season game that the trio played together.

OK, you make a swap of Walker and Joseph, but in inserting Mailloux, who Montgomery said pregame didn’t want players sitting for too long, he started the game with putting veteran Cam Fowler there and putting Tyler Tucker with Justin Faulk because of the lack of trust in playing the two guys with the least amount of experience together.

I actually was caught off-guard by the changes at the morning skate, just because of the cohesion that the previous game’s lineup had together.

It’s easy to second-guess now with such a poor loss, but the result speaks for itself.

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New coach Darian DeVries injects new style and renewed hope in Hoosier season opening rout

Indiana coach Darian DeVries rekindled some old memories Wednesday night by patrolling the Assembly Hall sideline in a crimson-colored Adidas quarter-zip, his son dressed in the traditional cream tank top and shorts with no name on the back. From the completely revamped roster to the Hoosiers up-tempo style, their strong 3-point shooting performance to a harassing defense, DeVries' debut had hopeful Indiana fans thinking it was a smash hit. The DeVries family couldn't have asked for anything more.

Pat Cummins targets return in second Ashes Test but doubts remain beyond Brisbane

  • Australia captain is on track to feature at Gabba next month

  • But paceman may need to rest during final three Tests

Australia captain Pat Cummins is back bowling multiple overs on a reduced run-up and has targeted returning to the team for the second Ashes Test against England, a day-nighter in Brisbane starting on 4 December.

The fast bowler has been sidelined by a lower-back issue since July and has already been ruled out of the series opener in Perth, where he will be replaced as skipper by Steve Smith.

Continue reading...

DeVries era opens with a bang as Reed Bailey scores 21 to lead Indiana past Alabama A&M 98-51

Reed Bailey opened his Indiana career by scoring 21 points and Lamar Wilkerson added 19 points and four 3-pointers to lead the Hoosiers past Alabama A&M 98-51 on Wednesday night in the first game under new coach Darian DeVries. DeVries has won three straight season openers at three different schools and this one again came with the help of his son, Tucker, a two-time Missouri Valley Conference Player of the Year at Drake. Sam Alexis had 17 points and eight rebounds as the Hoosiers, who had no scorers returning from last season's team, had five players finish with double-digit scoring totals.

Knicks pour in 83 second-half points to beat Timberwolves 137-114

The Knicks used an 83-point second half and a constricting defense to snuff out the Minnesota Timberwolves for a 135-114 win on Wednesday night at Madison Square Garden.

After an even first half, Jalen Brunson took over in the third, with 12 points, five rebounds and four assists, and OG Anunoby owned the start of the fourth quarter with eight fast points as the Knicks turned a two-point halftime deficit into a 15-point lead with seven minutes to play in the contest and put the game on ice from there.

Anunoby led the Knicks with 25 points on 10-for-17 shooting (3-for-5 from deep) with eight rebounds and a plus-14 in 32 minutes. Brunson finished with 23 points on 9-for-20 shooting, 10 assists, seven rebounds, and was a plus-16 in 33 minutes.

Julius Randle, in his second game back at MSG after the trade, led the Timberwolves with 32 points on 12-for-21 shooting with five rebounds, four assists, but was a minus-16 in 38 minutes.

New York improved to 5-0 at home to start the season, winning a third straight after three straight losses on the road. 

Here are the takeaways...

- On the night, New York was just faster to the basketball for all but the first few minutes of the game: out-rebounding the visitors 56-38, with a 31-14 edge in second-chance points, and a 62-40 edge in points in the paint. The Knicks had four starters in double figures and got 53 points from the bench, led by Josh Hart, pouring in 18 on 7-for-12 shooting (4-for-5 from three) with five rebounds, four assists for a plus-12 in 27 minutes. 

Karl-Anthony Towns scored 15 points with 10 rebounds, four assists, and two blocks in 31 minutes and was a plus-15. Mikal Brides had 13 points on 5-for-12 shooting with five assists and was a plus-13 in 33 minutes. In just 16 minutes, Mitchell Robinson had eight points (4-for-5 shooting) with 10 rebounds (nine offensive) with three blocks, and was a plus-7.

Anthony Edwards, back in the lineup after missing four games due to a hamstring injury, started slow with just five points (2-for-5) in the first half. He was blocked twice in the opening moments of the third as he didn’t look himself. He finished with 15 points on 5-for-13 shooting (3-for-7 from deep) and was a minus-25 in 29 minutes. Donte DiVincenzo, in his first game back since the trade, had spurts of good play and scored 21 points on 7-for-15 shooting (5-for-11 from deep) but was a minus-14 in 36 minutes.

- The Knicks' offense did not start smoothly, with four turnovers and 0-for-5 from the floor in the first four minutes. Mike Brown had seen enough, calling for time with his side down 13-4. Bridges finally got the Knicks’ first field goal with a three, which started a 10-2 run, including two run-outs, as the home side finally turned defense into offense. 

After an 0-for-6 start, the Knicks finished the quarter converting on 10 of 15, capped by Robinson scooping his fifth rebound (fourth offensive) and laying it in before the buzzer for a 28-26 lead.

Brunson made just 2 of 6 to start with four points and two turnovers, but added four assists and two rebounds. Hart knocked down his first two threes of the game and added a good assist to Guerschon Yabusele for a corner three. Anunoby added four first-quarter points on three attempts, but put on a defensive clinic with effort across the board.

Randle had his typical good first quarter, scoring 11 points on 4-for-7 shooting. And he added seven more in the second, to go along with three assists, two rebounds, and a block, and was plus-10 in 20 first-half minutes.

- A pair of emphatic Towns dunks – first over Rudy Gobert and then over Edwards – helped New York build an eight-point edge early in the second, but Minnesota's ball movement continued to be good and got them a pair of back-to-back open threes. But a 7-0 Knicks spurt built the lead up to nine, with Miles McBride scoring five of his first-half seven and Jordan Clarkson grabbing a dunk off a nice backdoor cut from a Towns feed. McBride finished with 14 points (6-for-10 shooting) with four assists and three boards and was a game-high plus-26 in 21 minutes. Clarkson finished with seven off the bench in 16 minutes.

But that lead was quickly erased by 14 unanswered points from Minnesota, with DiVincenzo connecting twice from three and Randle walking into an easy one as Towns left him wide open, forcing another Brown timeout. Brunson put a stop to it as the Knicks ran a good play for him to get a three, as they got back into things to level the score, but Randle scored four in the final half-minute to give Minnesota a 58-54 lead at the break.

New York was outrebounding the visitors 21-17 at the half, but Minnesota was 20-for-38 from the floor (52.6 percent) and 12-for-23 from deep (52.2 percent) compared to 21-for-46 (45.7 percent) and 8-for-18 (44.4 percent) for the home side.

- New York’s offense didn’t start clicking immediately after the break, but the defense began to tighten the screws, highlighted by a 13-2 run powered by a Towns block, Anunoby steal, Hart charge with Anunoby and Brunson each scoring five to match their largest lead of nine.

The Knicks finished the third with 40 points on 17-for-28 shooting (60.7 percent) as the Wolves went just 9-for-24 from the floor, building an eight-point lead. The hottest hand belonged to Brunson, who turned it on in the third, scoring 12 points on 5-for-8 shooting. Not to be overlooked, Robinson added three dunks, three rebounds, three blocks, and a steal in the third.

In the second half, the Knicks shot 60.7 percent (34-for-56) and held the visitors to 44.4 percent (20-for-45). As a unit, New York was 55-for-102 (53.9 percent) from the floor and 19-for-42 from three (45.2 percent).

Highlights

What's next

The Knicks have a few days off before they host the Nets on Sunday, with the tip set for 6 p.m.

Nets defeat Pacers, 112-103, to pick up first win of season

INDIANAPOLIS (AP) — Michael Porter Jr. had 32 points and 11 rebounds, and the Brooklyn Nets overcame the loss of leading scorer Cam Thomas to claim their first victory of the season in a 112-103 road win over the Indiana Pacers on Wednesday night.

Porter made 10 of 20 shots, including four three-pointers, as the Nets pulled away in the fourth quarter in a game of spurts that featured 12 lead changes and 10 ties. His final three-point play pushed the Nets ahead 110-103 with 22.1 seconds remaining.

Porter’s extra scoring was needed after Thomas, who entered with a 24.4-point scoring average, exited midway through the first quarter with hamstring tightness. It’s the same hamstring that limited him to 25 games last season.

The Nets, who had lost the first seven games this season, got four other double-digit efforts as Nic Claxton scored 18, Noah Clowney had 17, Tyrese Martin 16 and Terance Mann 15.

The Pacers, who are also now 1-7, were led by Pascal Siakam’s 23 points and nine assists. Ben Sheppard scored 18. Backup center Jay Huff added 16 with four three-pointers.

Up next

The Nets host the Detroit Pistons on Friday.

The Pacers visit the Denver Nuggets on Saturday.

Sergei Murashov’s First NHL Shot With The Penguins Is Here

The future is now for the Pittsburgh Penguins after they called up goaltending prospect Sergei Murashov on Tuesday. 

Murashov was called up to the NHL squad from Wilkes-Barre/Scranton, along with forward Danton Heinen and defenseman Ryan Graves, before the Penguins announced on Wednesday that forwards Justin Brazeau and Noel Acciari, along with goaltender Tristan Jarry, will be out for multiple weeks with injuries. The Penguins also sent defenseman Owen Pickering back to WBS.

Brazeau has missed the last two games with an upper-body injury, while Acciari and Jarry sustained their injuries during Monday's game against the Toronto Maple Leafs. 

This will be Murashov's first chance to show what he can do in the NHL after lighting up the AHL to start the 2025-26 season. He was named the AHL's Goaltender of the Month on Tuesday after finishing October with a 5-1 record, a 1.68 goals-against average, a .935 save percentage, and a shutout. He also allowed only 10 goals on 154 shots last month.

He was asked about that honor after Wednesday's practice and thanked his teammates for their efforts. He also confirmed that his confidence comes from what he's doing in the process, not the results.

"My confidence always comes from what I’m doing from the process, not from results," Murashov said. "So yeah, I think it was a really good process. First and foremost, I would like to say thanks to my team. They were all battling, and efforts all around were really, really high, and I truly appreciate that. I think it’s a good to work with all of the coaches in the Penguins organization. And yeah, I think again, it’s all about the process and what I’m doing, and enjoying my time."

Overall, he's 5-2 with a 1.73 goals-against average and a .931 save percentage this year. He's a significant reason why the Wilkes-Barre/Scranton Penguins are off to an 8-2-0 start. He also got time with the WBS Penguins last year and won his first 10 starts, setting a new franchise record for the longest winning streak in a rookie season. 

He always looks so calm and composed while he's in the crease. Everything comes naturally to him, and his athletic ability is freakishly good. He still needs to work on his rebound control a bit, but it has improved to start this year.

Sep 27, 2025; Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, USA; Pittsburgh Penguins goaltender Sergei Murashov (1) takes the ice to warm up before the game against the Columbus Blue Jackets at PPG Paints Arena. Mandatory Credit: Charles LeClaire-Imagn Images

Up to this point, the Penguins have rotated starts between Jarry and Silovs, and head coach Dan Muse was asked if that will continue now that Murashov is up. He didn't want to tip his hand just yet. 

"I mean, I guess I'll even go on the start of that with the going 50/50. That's been the case up to this point. At no point did we say this is something we're locked in and has to be this way; we're like everything else. We're constantly evaluating, we're constantly looking at what those options are. In terms of right now, in terms of how we're gonna go through things, we're still having conversations," Muse said after practice. "We're having conversations with the coaching staff, conversations with (Penguins goaltending coach) Andy Chiodo, and the rest of the staff. We're gonna continue to have those conversations, make decisions based on what we think is best, and those conversations will continue to go from game to game."

Penguins Call Up 3 Players & Announce Several Roster MovesPenguins Call Up 3 Players & Announce Several Roster MovesThe Pittsburgh Penguins have made a series of roster moves.

The Penguins are about to go through a stretch where they'll play three games in four days. Murashov will get at least one of those three starts, but could he get two? The Penguins are set to play Alex Ovechkin and the Washington Capitals on Thursday. Wouldn't it be something to see Murashov go up against Ovechkin in his first NHL start? If he got that start, he'd get one of the two games over the weekend since the Penguins play the New Jersey Devils on Saturday and the Los Angeles Kings on Sunday.

However, Muse could opt to play it safe and give Silovs the start on Thursday before splitting the weekend back-to-back. 

Nevertheless, he's going to play at some point this week (and after), and he'll have the chance to show everyone that he could be the Penguins' goaltender of the future. 


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